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Rich Rollo
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Mat Blankenship
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Joseph F. Dumond
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Jerry Eastbourne
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Terri Pierce
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Timothy Tabor
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John Wesley Anderson, Jr.
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Gary D. Cluck
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Robert S. Weil
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Christie Castorino
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By Wagner Anarca ''Papis''
This book is an answer to the entire people that ask me about how to do drawings. I like to read and watch everything that is coming to me about drawings, art, music, dance and poetry� So my advice is: �Keep on drawing and drawing�� �Keep your Sketchbook close than your cell phone� A lot of fun sketching, scribbling, rendering, rough out, mark, shade, delineate, delineate, crayon, caricature, limn, express it, etch, design, dropping a line, trace or doodle!!!!!! Please, Have a Fun!!!!
FORMAT: Softcover
By Wagner Anarca ''Papis''
This book is an answer to the entire people that ask me about how to do drawings. I like to read and watch everything that is coming to me about drawings, art, music, dance and poetry� So my advice is: �Keep on drawing and drawing�� �Keep your Sketchbook close than your cell phone� A lot of fun sketching, scribbling, rendering, rough out, mark, shade, delineate, delineate, crayon, caricature, limn, express it, etch, design, dropping a line, trace or doodle!!!!!! Please, Have a Fun!!!!
FORMAT: E-Book
By Humphrey Humberto Pachecker
No Description Available.
FORMAT: Hardcover
By Humphrey Humberto Pachecker
No Description Available.
FORMAT: Softcover
By Humphrey Humberto Pachecker
No Description Available.
FORMAT: E-Book
By Salvador Edmundo Rosillo
Rosillo’s Analysis, Drawings and Diagrams features cinematographer Akira Kurosawa’s “The Bad Sleep Well.” The author provides a brief introduction on Kurosawa—a background of his life, those who influenced him, his artistry and interests, and his works and career. “The Bad Sleep Well” was the first film made by the Kurosawa production company. In it, Kurosawa wanted to make a film of social significance, since he does not believe in making films to make money only, or in films that take advantage of the audience. The film in study is about corruption, graft, bribery, and more, at the public level in high places, where people hide behind great facades in high buildings and sumptuous offices. Kurosawa’s concerns are total environments; within the segments or units of his films, one can find subdivisions that in themselves could be called segments or units. The movement of these sequences is around a central idea. Kurosawa’s style is compared to that of the movement of the planets around the sun. It illustrates the treatment that he gives to the segments or units, which then creates the film.
FORMAT: Softcover
By Salvador Edmundo Rosillo
Rosillo’s Analysis, Drawings and Diagrams features cinematographer Akira Kurosawa’s “The Bad Sleep Well.” The author provides a brief introduction on Kurosawa—a background of his life, those who influenced him, his artistry and interests, and his works and career. “The Bad Sleep Well” was the first film made by the Kurosawa production company. In it, Kurosawa wanted to make a film of social significance, since he does not believe in making films to make money only, or in films that take advantage of the audience. The film in study is about corruption, graft, bribery, and more, at the public level in high places, where people hide behind great facades in high buildings and sumptuous offices. Kurosawa’s concerns are total environments; within the segments or units of his films, one can find subdivisions that in themselves could be called segments or units. The movement of these sequences is around a central idea. Kurosawa’s style is compared to that of the movement of the planets around the sun. It illustrates the treatment that he gives to the segments or units, which then creates the film.
FORMAT: Hardcover
By Leonard Melkus Jr.
If you are looking at a painting with the same mind-set that you have when you look out of your window, you are probably missing the Art.
Do you know what it means to empathize with form? You probably do it all the time with music. It's what you are doing when you are tapping your foot to the rhythm. All Art Forms communicate this way, through form. It is something that is easy to miss if you aren't looking for it.
In appreciating Fine Art, we admire the genius of the artists who can communicate this way. I wrote this little book just to point this out. It's something that is good to know, especially if you are thinking about 'doing some art' yourself.
FORMAT: Softcover
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